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(10/18/18 4:00pm)
The annual Undergraduate Research Symposium (URS), sponsored by both the Hopkins Undergraduate Society for Neuroscience (Nu Rho Psi) and the Hopkins Office for Undergraduate Research (HOUR), took place last week on Oct. 8.
(10/18/18 4:00pm)
In the 19th century, polished white rice was increasingly sought after in Japan. Advances in technology allowed grains to be mechanically milled rather than processed by hand, with the outer and inner husks removed and the remainder polished to a glossy white. This rice was easy to store, lasted longer than its predecessors and, to some, probably tasted better.
(10/11/18 4:00pm)
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is a retrovirus capable of infecting vital organs and CD4 cells, a type of lymphocyte, that comprise the human immune system. Once transmitted, the virus grows and progresses in the absence of antiretroviral therapy (ART), which is a drug therapy that either prevents HIV infection or slows down the spread of the virus. These antiretrovirals include several types of inhibitors.
(10/11/18 4:00pm)
Many regions in the human genome are composed of “junk DNA” that do not code for proteins in the cell.
(10/11/18 4:00pm)
The Hopkins Office for Undergraduate Research (HOUR) hosted the third lecture in the Student Seminar Series on Oct. 1. The series provides a venue for undergraduates to present their research.
(10/11/18 4:00pm)
In the first week of October, the Nobel prize committees announced the laureates of the 2018 Nobel Prize.
(10/11/18 4:00pm)
The last abortion clinic in Kentucky can stay open after a federal judge ruled that a state law on licensing agreements was unconstitutional.
(10/11/18 4:00pm)
Through a $5.1 billion grant given by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Mechanical Engineering Professor Jeff Wang and his research team are beginning to create a device that can test patients for gonorrhea and detect whether the strain has developed antibiotic resistance. Wang is a core faculty member at the Institute for NanoBioTechnology (INBT).
(10/11/18 4:00pm)
Patches, a nine-year-old dachshund, is now cancer-free thanks to a group of researchers.
(10/11/18 4:00pm)
The Hopkins Office for Undergraduate Research (HOUR) hosted the third lecture in the Student Seminar Series on Oct. 1. The series provides a venue for undergraduates to present their research.
(10/11/18 4:00pm)
Syphilis was nearly wiped out in the United States under the leadership of Gail Bolan, the director of the Division for Sexually Transmitted Disease (STD) Prevention at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). However, in the last four years, syphilis has made a comeback and it has particularly been affecting newborns at high rates.
(10/11/18 4:00pm)
Amazon and Apple deny their information was compromised
(10/04/18 4:00pm)
Safer testing options of magnetic resonance technology are now readily available with the successful development of a 3D phantom head by Sossena Wood, a postdoctoral candidate in Bioengineering at the University of Pittsburgh.
(10/04/18 4:00pm)
A 2015 study from the Harvard Business Review found that nearly half of African-American and Latina women in U.S. STEM careers reported being confused for administrative or janitorial staff.
(10/04/18 4:00pm)
Remember the tale of the Trojan Horse?
(10/04/18 4:00pm)
Kidney cancer is among the 10 most common cancers in both men and women. In adults, renal cell carcinoma is the most common type of kidney cancer. The American Cancer Society predicts that there will be 65,340 new diagnoses and 14,970 deaths due to renal cell carcinoma in 2018. A novel treatment has been developed that may be able to reverse drug resistance in renal cell carcinoma, using nanotherapy in combination with chemotherapeutic drugs.
(10/04/18 4:00pm)
Of the six leading causes of death in the United States, Alzheimer’s is the only that cannot be prevented or slowed.
(10/04/18 4:00pm)
As early as Hippocrates’ time, people have pondered on the best way to classify personalities. In fact, Hippocrates came up with one of the oldest personality type systems in the world, where he defined four personality types based on a person’s “humor” or the proportion of bodily fluids in one’s body. The predominant form of fluid determines the person’s appearance, behavior and psychological type.
(10/04/18 4:00pm)
Scientists have found preliminary evidence that humans and octopuses have an evolutionary link that diverged over 500 million years ago. Serotonin receptors conserved in the brains of both octopuses and humans show that they both exhibit similar behaviors.
(10/04/18 4:00pm)
In light of the #MeToo Movement and the allegations of sexual assault against Brett Kavanaugh, many educators and students are looking at how youth are taught about consent and healthy sexual relationships in primary school.